Pours with a bright white head that disappears almost immediately. Lots of bubbles racing to to top. Golden yellow in colour.

This beer does taste and smells similar to the green jolly rancher candies (fine by me cause I like them). Lots of sweet and soury apples and a little barnyard funk.

The only difference between the nose and the palate is its a little sweeter on the tongue. This is one of those beers that are great on a very hot day but having more than one or two and it becomes a little to sweet for my liking.

The beer pours a slightly hazy yellow with a white head. The aroma is strong apple with some light tartness. The flavor is a mix of apples, both sweet and tart. The beer tastes a lot like apple cider. Medium high carbonation and medium mouthfeel. This has nothing in common with other Belgian lambics but as far as fruit beers go, this is a good one.

355ml bottle. I like the dual fastening system, which requires two separate tools to open, like there's a secret inside worth protecting or something.

This beer pours a hazy, medium, um 'apple juice' yellow colour, with two fingers of puffy, billowy, and densely foamy off-white head, which leaves some wildly erratic, swirling eddy lace around the glass in its slow and meandering wake.

The carbonation is moderate, just a wee frothiness here and there, the body medium-full in weight for the style, kind of fleshy, and yet smooth by the same sword. It finishes off-dry and generally clean, the yeasty apple fruitiness hard to deny or dispel entirely.

An enjoyable fruit-laden lambic, one that relies on the inherent tartness of the apple, with little in the way of extra sugar, rendering a decent balance between the tart and the sweet. Along with the cassis and the raspberry versions, there seems to be a divide developing in this line of entry-level fruit lambics, i.e. sweet, vs. not so sweet.

A: Poured clear golden yellow with a very slight haziness. There was a small white head that quickly died down into a thin layer of bubbles, which later only surrounded the edges of the glass. The level of carbonation is light.
S: The aroma is strikingly very similar to Jolly Rancher candy - sweet green apples.
T: The taste is nearly identical to the smell, except there's a slight bit of sourness in the finish.
M: The beer feels light bodied on the palate, similar to sparkling cider. It's sweeter, but doesn't taste that syrupy because of the carbonation.
D: Very easy to drink. I could easily have lots of these in a sitting but it's a good beer to start out before moving on to other styles.

The aroma from this hits you immediately. Pour this into a snifter and it just blasts your olfactory senses. It's not just a sharp sour apple aroma, a little alcohol and wood bleed through. It has a fairly standard cider look to it with a bit of foam. High carbonation gives this a club soda feel. The taste is crisp and refreshing with a green apple peel tartness with a little lemon and oak underlining it all. Certainly not a preference of mine, but for a lambic it is very pleasant.

I poured into my Carlsberg 250ml glass. It is a hazy yellow color with a couple inches of white head. I could smell the green apple as soon as I pulled the cork. The aroma is pretty intense. I also get a musty basement smell, too. The taste is really sweet up front like a honeycrisp apple. Then there is some sourness through the middle, but it finishes on the sweet side. It reminds me of apple juice with some sourness in it. I happen to like apple juice. As far as the Lindemans fruits go, I like this, and the cassis is the best IMHO. These beers tend to be really sweet and tough to drink more than one.

Pours a hazy, golden color. 1/3 inch head of a white color. Great retention and great lacing. Smells of strong apples, tart malt, and slight yeast. Fits the style of a Lambic - Fruit. Mouth feel is sharp and crisp with a high carbonation level. There is a strong tartness present, as well. Tastes of apple, yeast, tart malt, and slight sweet malt. Overall, an average lambic.

My first Lambic. Very good, but not very beer-like at all. Basically it looks like apple juice. It smells like sour apple. You pretty much get what's advertised here. Taste like apples, of course. It is slightly sour, but nothing unbearable. The drinkability is very high on this. I look forward to trying more Lambics after having this.

Split a 12oz bottle with the girlfriend last night. Review from notes.

A- Pours a semi-hazy brownish yellow color. One finger white head comes and goes while leaving a great looking blotchy lacing everywhere. Looks nice to say the least.

S- This smells like a ton of sour apples hitting you in the face. Artifical smelling at the same time....almost Jolly Rancher like. There is a light fresh apple juice smell to this as well. Simple but that is all it needs.

T- This is like sucking on a Jolly Rancher! Any sort of sourness that would have been in the beer is but in the backing of this beer so the whole forefront could be something of a sweet apple taste. Flavor is very one sides with it just being apples. Nothing wrong with this at all...you can't compare it to other lambics though.

M- Light mouthfeel. Carbonation is very high in this beer making it fizz on your palate. Jolly Rancher sour apple notes on the palate and into the aftertaste. Flavors are crisp and this is a clean tasting beer.

D- I would have no problem drinking all of this by myself. The big candy flavor profile this one brings off though leaves me to only drink up to 12oz at a time before moving onto something else. Good beer for the girls or people who say they don't like beer.

The liquid is misty golden, looks very inviting and leaves a 1 - 2 finger thick lid on top of it.

The smell is very sweet with some traces of sourness. I didn't pick up much more than the obvious apple. (Granny Smith)

The taste is almost like sour apple candy when it hits you, very distingt. It tastes almost artificial... But the aftertaste brings you a little surprise. A very round and gentle, almost warm taste of nougat.

Unfortunately this beer was to sweet for me and with kind of aggressive carboration. Very enjoyable on a hot summer day in between two lagers, but no more.

Somehow I think I'm being a little too generous here. Anybody else remember the horror that was Apple Bach from Cherryland? Anyway, poured with a smallish off white head that soon subsided and a tiny bit of lace. Color is a hazy amber. Aroma is solid tart apples. Flavor is solid sweet tart apples. Body is ok and carbonation is fizzy. Finish is like flavor. Doubt that I'll ever have another.

The beer pours a maize clear color with a 2 finger white head that has good retention and lacing.

Everyone compates this to an apple jolly rancher and that exactly what it is. It is a green sour apple, very sweet and wonderful.

The taste is not as great or sweet as the aroma. It doesn't have a ton of sweetness doesn't really taste like an apple and has too much bitterness to it but not a lambic bitterness. I've had the Floris Apple and it dominates this beer.

Pours a hazy yellowy brown color. Looks like a nice dark champagne with lots of carbonation and white, bubbly head.

Smells of apple, just about exclusively. Basically cider with a touch of sourness from the brett.

Tart apple. Very sweet up front; the yeast and sourness kind of takes backstage to the sweetness of the apple. Turns a bit drier as it is going down, but leaves a very sweet aftertaste which is almost unpleasant.

The feel is a bit powdery and crisp, but the sweetness adds a very full body. This beer was too sweet for me. I am the same with sweet and dessert wines. They are just too much for me. Still the flavor is good, and I like the hints of sourness present in it.

While these Lindemans beers are classed as fruit lambics, I don't approach them expecting something similar to a Cantillon or a Drei Fonteinen. The sweetness and lack of funky sourness precludes that. Instead I view them as a Belgian take on a fruit beer and removed from your traditional lambic. As such, I really like them for what they are.

Pours the colour of apple cide with absolutely no chance of seeing anything through the glass. Capped with a small, clipped white head that leaves some nice lace spots on the unique Lindemans branded glass. Fresh pressed apple juice aroma betrays this beer's simplicity. Likewise, the flavour is ridiculously simple. Fresh apple juice, with a bit of a sour green apple character taht's amply balanced by sweetness. Its actually pretty well-constructed for what it is, and it makes a nice light dinner beer. Nothing in the nature of true lambic character.

Overall, a nice fruit beer, whose simple flavour and quenching body make it an easy drinker. I'd take the framboise any day, but this is pleasant enough.

S: granny smith apples, candy like smell (like an apple jolly rancher), and a little bit of cinnamon on the tail end

T: lots of tart apple as the nose suggests, taste a lot like sour apple candy, not a whole lot in the way of grain profile or lambic funkiness. The taste is pleasant, but since I am reviewing it to style, it takes a hit. Does not remind me of a lambic, rather a candy/fruit bomb

MF: high carb, effervescent, thin body

D: this makes a good dessert beer, but not much else as its sweetness can get to be cloying after a few sips. Like I said, it has a pleasant taste, but it tastes nothing like a beer.